The text is a preparation ground for coming to terms with the intensities of trauma and responding to the urgent imperative for trauma-informed practice. Consistent with Dr. Shalkas commitments to generating language, skills, and dispositions for practitioners, educators, and students, the text is a forum on care as she lovingly, which is to say, deliberately and compassionately, calls forth humanizing ways of being.
Wilson Okello, Assistant Professor of Higher Education, The Pennsylvania State University, USA
Given the ongoing presence of trauma for college students, the importance of Shalkas book cannot be overstated. Cultivating Trauma-Informed Practice in Student Affairs speaks to a necessary shift in educational praxis and serves as a timeless reminder for educators to embody a person-centered ethic of care in an educational landscape increasingly animated through the dehumanizing logic of racialized capitalism.
Z Nicolazzo, Associate Professor, Trans* Studies in Education
I have been changed by Dr. Tricia Shalka's writing and will be a better student affairs educator because of the gift of her work. She has written a must-read for all educators committed to creating cultures of care. She calls us to act by helping us understand that there is an imperative for trauma-informed student affairs practice. Given that the majority of college students have already been exposed to trauma, and more will be impacted while in college, the need to act is now. Read this book for it is a masterful and compassionate blueprint on the principles, practice, skills, knowledge and ways of being that foster environments that create the conditions for students to thrive. Become a trauma-informed practitioner --- our students are depending on us.
Patty Perillo, Vice President for Student Affairs and Affiliate Faculty, Higher Education, Student Affairs and International Education Policy, University of Maryland, USA